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Toto Wolff: “They did it in a fantastic and spectacular way…”

Mercedes boss Toto Wolff says that Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg will be allowed to race each other throughout the season.

He also acknowledged that it was important to have two drivers who could be trusted by the team.

“You need to have the drivers who understand where the team came from, and that it’s important not to risk the image of such a brand,” he said. “We’re representing a big brand, so you need to know what you do. And they did it in a fantastic and spectacular way. I’m happy.”

He confirmed that the situation would remain unchanged.

“Yes, until we lose some front wings! Then we sit down again and discuss if this was [the right] strategy. They’re racing drivers, it’s academic… Let’s leave it there!”

Asked if he has any doubts about allowing them to race, in Bahrain he said: “Turn 3 after the start of the race I had doubts! I was like, ‘No please, not for one and a half hours now!’. And then at the end when we had the restart we discussed that we trusted the drivers. We knew that they wouldn’t risk their own car and the one of the other driver. Nico is still in the championship lead, it’s about collecting solid points.”

“You know what we said was exactly the same sentence to both of them, just reminding them in a moment before the heat would start just to say don’t forget what we discussed. This was not at all a strategic call, it was just a gentle reminder of where we came from.”

Regarding the decision to put Rosberg on primes in the middle stint, he said: “We knew that the second car only had a chance to win if you offset him with the strategy. Both cars were on a strategy to win the race.”

Wolff said that the team thought Rosberg would be able to pass Hamilton in the closing stint.

“That was the theory, but Lewis had an amazing first couple of laps on the prime. We saw it in a previous stint, one of the Force Indias proved to be really quick on the prime.”

Meanwhile Wolff said he was not frustrated by the negative comments from Bernie Ecclestone and Luca di Montezemolo.

“We had some good discussions with all of them today, and I think it’s pretty clear that we love F1 and we don’t want to talk F1 down, and this is the kind of spirit that we want to have in our future discussions. It’s not frustrating. It’s good that they came here, and I think that race came at the right time.”

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Nico Rosberg: “We want to put on an amazing show…”

Nico Rosberg says that the battle between the two Mercedes drivers in Bahrain was good for the sport and will help to silence the critics.

From pole Rosberg lost the lead to Hamilton at the start, but he made repeated attempts to find a way past. The team split the strategies, giving him option tyres for the final stint, when Lewis was on the primes.

“I didn’t have the best of starts,” said Rosberg. “It was still good but Lewis had a little of a better one and that’s the way it went. And then, I was quicker today, which I was pleased about and gave it a run. I tried to overtake at the end of the first stint, couldn’t make it stick. And then we tried to invert the strategies, just to give me a shot at the end, again to overtake. That was the plan before the race, so that worked out well, and I tried to keep a good pace on the Prime, knowing that I’ll have a shot again at the end with the Option.

“It was a good battle again, but unfortunately I couldn’t make it happen today. Lewis did a good job defending but, you know, it was a massive fight out there, and that’s what I’m here for. For racing like that. I think it was a good day for the sport, which is important, because of recent little bits of criticism. I think they’re all going to be rather quiet tomorrow – which is a very good thing. It’s good that us as Silver Arrows, we made it happen – but of course I am very unhappy with second.”

Rosberg said everything possible was done to give him a chance to overtake: “The team makes the decision for strategies. We did exactly the plan we discussed before the race. Everything went exactly to plan in order to give me the best opportunity to have a shot at overtaking him at the end of the race.

“The team played it as fair as they possibly could today, let us race flat out. I don’t think you need more evidence than you saw that we’re here to race this year and there’s no team orders. We want to put on an amazing show for you guys out there, and you at home, and today we managed. Of course that’s the small positive, but as I said I really don’t like coming second.”

Intriguingly Rosberg acknowledged that watching fans might have interpreted the ‘bring it home’ radio messages as a sign to hold station.

“I was well aware that the whole world was thinking ‘huh, here we go, Silver Arrows team orders, finally they’re there.’ That was clear to me but it wasn’t that at all, it was just ‘guys, make sure that you get these cars to the finish. Don’t break them, don’t crash.’ The message was clear anyway, not really necessary to give such a message because we know that, we drive very hard but in the end with the necessary respect but we’re free to race all the way.

“In the end, I just got a bit more overheating on the tyres in the last three laps because I was pushing so hard in the slipstream, you know, with less grip, sliding a lot and so the tyres just overheated in the last three laps and I couldn’t get close enough any more. And also with the hybrid, at times you have more then you have less. It’s coming and going and it’s difficult to be there in the right moment when you do have it. It’s not that easy, so there was then a period when I didn’t have enough boost power either.”

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Lewis Hamilton: “A lot of times he was in my blind spot…”

Lewis Hamilton called his brilliant Bahrain GP win one of the toughest of his career after he just managed to outfox team mate Nico Rosberg.

Hamilton snuck past the pole man at the start, and survived a series of attacks from Rosberg, who was handed a second chance when the safety car cut the gap before the final sprint to the flag.

“This weekend started off well and then I seemed to lose pace while Nico picked up his pace,” said Hamilton. “Today, I knew I needed to get a good start and things generally went my way, except when the pace car came out.
“I think the last time I had a race like that would probably be Indianapolis, 2007. So, a long, long time. Nico drove fantastically well. When you’re with you’re team-mate it’s very, very hard to make the right decisions of where to put your car, where to brake, all these different things, but yeah, it was great.”
Hamilton admitted it wasn’t easy to fend off Rosberg in the final stint, when the German had the advantage of the softer tyre.

“It was incredibly tough. As I said, it was one of the toughest situations I’ve been in for a long time. The Option tyre, for us, we believe it is worth six-and-a-half tenths. To hold that behind, to keep him out of my gap, out of my slipstream and the DRS was very, very hard. To be pushing flat out for ten laps…

“It was an exceptional race, I think, to be able to have that. Me and Nico haven’t had a race like that since back in our karting days. I did think today, I was just saying to him today, there was a race we did years ago in… I don’t know what year it was, in karting, our first race together. He was leading the whole way and in the last lap I overtook him and won the race. I thought today for sure he’s going to do the same to me, and get me back. That’s what was going through my head.”

Regarding how close their fight was, he said: “A lot of times he was in my blind spot and I had no idea if he was there or not, so I tried to leave space. You don’t know whether he’s attacking or braking later into the next corner because you don’t even know where he is. That was very difficult.

“But for me it feels like a long time that I’ve been able to have a real racer’s race and really use whatever skills that I’ve acquired over the years as a youngster in karting. Being able to apply them in Formula One is a lot harder but to be able to pull them out of the bag and use them again… The time that I went round the outside or got back, just timing it right – you know, it’s a fantastic feeling to be able to do that. It’s one of the greatest feelings when you obviously come out on top.”

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Montezemolo calling for F1 changes – but not for 2014

Luca di Montezemolo has reiterated his desire for future changes to the F1 rules – but insists that he doesn’t want to rein in Mercedes by implementing those changes in 2014.

The Ferrari presisdent is meeting with Bernie Ecclestone and Jean Todt this weekend.

“We want to increase the value, passion, the success of F1,” he said today. “The three problems are we cannot have an F1 that is energy/fuel economy formula, we have to push from the first lap until the last. If an engine drinks less fuel, good, it means that you can do the race with less fuel if you want.

“This is one point. The public doesn’t like a taxi driver that has to respect the fuel, this is not F1. The second problem is the music of the engine, not the noise, the music of the engine, that is F1, and the third is that the rules are too complicated, particularly for the people on the track, how can they understand the fuel meters? It’s really complicated.

“We have to do a formula that’s less complicated. For the short time, it’s good not to do anything, but maybe there are some ideas that we can share together, I emphasise together, to improve the situation. Because I don’t like to think even to think of the possibility of the F1 decline.”

When it was suggested that Ferrari and Renault need to do a better job, he insisted that his frustration was nothing to do with Ferrari’s current performance.

“You make a big confusion, as always happens when things are not clear. What I am saying is nothing to do with the today rules. Ferrari has already said that they were against the limit of fuel, because this is not F1, and I told lost Christmas in front of all the journalists that I was very afraid that the new formula means that the drivers are taxi drivers. But this is nothing to do with the today formula.

“We have to take car of some indications from the public to look ahead and to change something without interfering with the today rules. I think if somebody is in the lead, as is Mercedes, it’s absolutely correct not to change something now, even if cut, it’s a proposal from Bernie Ecclestone, one lap, just to give the public the feeling that you can push from the start to the end, it doesn’t change anything for anybody.

“Ferrari, with the rules of today, they have to be more competitive, so I’m pushing to be more competitive. It’s not a question to change the rules now. For the future, it’s a different situation.”

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Bernie Ecclestone: “I think everybody’s complaining…”

Bernie Ecclestone today repeated his opposition to the current F1 rules, and hinted that the 100kgs fuel allowance could be increased.

One theory is that more fuel means that teams could run higher revs – they are running nowhere near the 15,000rpm limit – which would improve the sound, but there is clearly a bigger picture with regard to the relative fuel efficiency of the three engines. It’s no surprise that those who have been negative recently do not have Mercedes power.

Talk of rule changes in the course of this season is academic anyway.

“What is wrong?,” he said on a visit to the Bahrain media centre. “What is wrong is these fantastic engines. The engines, without any doubt, are incredible, the amount of power they produce for the small amount of fuel. I don’t think that’s F1 business. They should be in touring cars or something, not F1.

“I think what’s important is that the teams know the problem, the engine manufacturers know the problem, and they’re trying to sort things out.

“I think everybody’s complaining, really. Even Mercedes I think. I don’t like people not being happy.”

Asked about the race promoters he said: “They’re all worried that if they lose spectators, they are going to be in trouble, obviously.”

Regarding what could be done, he said: “I think they can do something about the noise. They need another 10kgs of fuel, or something.”

The latter is an unrealistic target given that the teams designed their cars around a fuel tank tailored to the 100kgs limit, with a little margin for the laps to the grid and for the trip to parc ferme. The alternative would be to shorten the races, which Bernie said would not happen.

Ecclestone seemed bemused when told that some teams didn’t even need the full 100kgs to finish the Malaysian GP, saying, “You’ve got some information I haven’t got…”

He insisted that he wasn’t out to handicap Mercedes.

“Mercedes without a doubt have done a better job. They shouldn’t be punished for doing a better job. We shouldn’t change the regulations to punish them.”

He also offered a less negative view of the situation: “There’s another way of looking at it. Will people get used to the way it is today. If that’s the case, good…”

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Ecclestone says two new F1 team entries will be accepted

Bernie Ecclestone says that two future F1 entries have been accepted – although he didn’t specify when they would join the World Championship.

The two teams in the frame in recent weeks are from the USA and Romania. The Gene Haas project will in essence be a Ferrari customer team using as much Maranello technology as the rules allow. Next year the rules on sharing technology have been relaxed, so that in effect a team needs to have only its own IP in terms of chassis and bodywork.

TheRomanian-backed team, which is expected to use a Renault engine, will use the Bavarian facilities of Dr Colin Kolles. There was also an approach from Stefan GP which is believed to has less weight behind it.

It’s not clear yet whether Haas could be ready to go for 2015, but sources say that the Romanian project is aiming for next season, given that Kolles already has a well-equipped facility in Germany.

Asked about Haas, Bernie said: “They will be accepted. We’ve also accepted another team as well. Whether they make it or not is another story. We’re happy to have another couple of teams. I’ve spoken to Jean Todt about it. We agreed yesterday, if two teams want to come in, we’ll let them in.”

Asked if 13 teams was acceptable, he said: “Yeah, sure.”

Haas is building a facility close to his NASCAR base and the Windshear Wind Tunnel, and is also expected to have a facility in Italy.

The driving force behind the Romanian project is Ion Bazac, a qualified doctor and former Romanian health minister. The 45-year-old has a number of business interests and is the country’s Ferrari importer, under the name Forza Rossa – an ironic twist given that the rival Haas project is Ferrari-backed. He’s also a past chairman of loan company Global Finance & Leasing.

He is the president a consortium of private and state funded investors whose motive is to promote the interests of Romania, and who have the support of the government.

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Perez ready to pounce if Mercedes stumbles?

Sergio Perez could be a dark horse in Bahrain on Sunday, and he might be the man ready to take advantage should Mercedes hit any problems.

The Mexican qualified fifth, and gained a place from the Ricciardo penalty. While Valtteri Bottas is ahead on the grid, Force India looked particularly strong over race runs. In Malaysia Nico Hulkenberg was able to finish fifth having made only two stops, proving that the car is good on tyres.

“I don’t think we can beat them by any strategy or anything,” he said of Mercedes when asked by this writer. “So the only chance is that they have a problem, and then we can dream with a victory. Our target is to get a podium, and be in a good position.

“I want to get a clean start and hopefully get Bottas off the line, and then just manage our race, our degradation, and do whatever we have to do for the race.

“It’s close between a two-stop and a three-stop, and it will be a race where it will be interesting to see how much degradation is a factor, and how well we can manage it.”

Peerz says the key so far this weekend has been avoiding trouble: “We got a rhythm on Friday. It’s the first weekend when we could really do good work without any problems. I’m confident for the race, and I think we can have a good one.”

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Sebastian Vettel: “I wasn’t able to extract 100% out of the car…”

Sebastian Vettel failed to make it out of Q2 in Bahrain today after experiencing a downshift problem – although the German also conceded that he hadn’t got the most out of the car.

His day started badly when he spun into a gravel trap in FP3. While the car was not stuck the engine cut as the anti-stall system failed to react properly, so he lost most of the session.

Vettel ended up in 11th place in Q2, but he will start 10th thanks to team mate Daniel Ricciardo’s penalty.

“On my final run we had some issued with the downshifts, which upset the balance,” he said. “It was the only shot I had in Q2. It was quite close. Good for Kimi who was 10th, and bad for me who was 11th at that stage. Couple of reasons why – I think at the end I wasn’t able to extract 100% out of the car.

“For some reason from one to the other, from the final run in Q1 to Q2 something went wrong and we couldn’t fix it in time, so I had to do the lap compromised. How much it affected the lap is difficult to measure, but surely it was no help the car behaviour wasn’t the way I wanted it or the way I expected it. But I’m not a fan of blaming something in particular. For sure that didn’t help, without it probably yes, I would have made it to Q3, but still it was not the session that we wanted to have this evening.”

Vettel said he also had a wastegate issue that he said cost a bit of performance on the straights. Despite his disappointment, he believes he can make progress in the race.

“I think yes, It depends who I have to overtake! But it’s always possible. I hope we find the right strategy to make sure we can use the pace of the car. I think once we are in free air we should be fine, but obviously it’s a bit easier to be in free air when you start from pole, rather than 10th or 11th.”

He was also encouraged by Ricciardo’s qualifying pace: “I think he did what he could and he did what the car could do. If you look at the gap from there, it’s quite big. It obviously it helps him because it puts him 13th I think tomorrow, which is a lot better than starting further back. It’s a shame because otherwise he could have been P3 on the grid. We felt already in testing that it’s a difficult track for us, we are down on power, and around here you need some power – that’s how it is. I think for tomorrow nevertheless I think we have a chance to put the car in a fairly good place in the points.”

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Penalty puts Sutil at back of grid

Adrian Sutil will drop to the back of the Bahrain GP grid after receiving a five-place penalty for an incident involving Romain Grosjean in Q1.

Sutil, who also gets two penalty points on his superlicence, had only qualified 18th after a troubled session for the Sauber driver.

The stewards reported that “car 99 forced car 8 off the track between turns 13 and 14 in an unsafe manner.”

Those who move up a place are Kamui Kobayashi, Jules Bianchi, Marcus Ericsson and Max Chilton.

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Fernando Alonso: “We have nothing to lose…”

Fernando Alonso says he was hampered by a loss of straight line performance over the course of qualifying in Bahrain, a handicap that led to him finishing Q3 in a lowly 10th place.

He will start ninth however, as Daniel Ricciardo has a 10-place penalty.

“I was losing power throughout the qualifying,” said Alonso. “So every run I was going out the car felt slower and slower on the straights. In Q2 I did 34.5s, in Q3 with less fuel and better track conditions I did 34.9s. Unfortunately when it counts we didn’t have the package available. We need to look, is it something damaged in the aerodynamics or the floor or whatever that makes the car slower? Or something in the power unit?

“Sometimes there are some software tweaks or something, it’s enough, or some changes on the steering wheel. We need to check if we did something during the qualifying. It just seemed to lose power slowly.”

Alonso remains optimistic for the race: “We start ninth with the Ricciardo penalty, so we start on the clean side. We need to have a good start and a good strategy if we want to recover. People around us are very fast, Hulkenberg starting behind, Vettel. We must look at the front, and also strong people at the rear. We need to have an aggressive race. We have nothing to lose – we are nearly out of the points already, so we must improve.”

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